SGC Meetings Require More Sense of Direction See Page 4 C, 4c Latest Deadline in the State a1ip CLOUDY. WARMER VOL. LXVII, No. 59 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1956 EIGHT PAGES ATHLETIC AID: Faculty Senate. Asks Stringency By JAMES ELSMAN JR. Faculty Senate yesterday advised its Western Conference repre- sentative to vote in such a way in Chicago Dec. 5 to make "as strin-' gent as possible" the rules controlling "special pecuniary privileges" to athletes. Introduced by Prof. Robert Angell of the sociology department, the motion further advised Prof. Marcus Plant of the Law School and Conference representative to "work consistently and unceasingly for an amateur code of athletics." This motion and another supporting "the position which the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Athletics has taken for several Miss Kiss "Public displays of affection" were banned outside ten womn- en's residence halls of Mar- quette University Wednesday. The action, radical by many University of Michigan stan- dards, is to be enforced by the Marquette equivalent of a week's social probation. Some students at the Mil- waukee school voiced Indigna- tion, but one girl there said, "If I'm out with a fellow I don't like, I'll just say kissing good- night is against school rules." Betty Jean Kafka, '57BAd, chairman of women's judiciary here, commented, "I don't think' it's going to be a major issue on this campus." Jean Scruggs, '58, Assembly Association president, said, "The whole thing is kind of SGC Board lia lpITw . . Vows Support of Baghdad 11 Ell X u.~ V B1'TV To Convenie Galens Drive Refusal Reason for Meeting By TAMMY MORRISON The Board in Review will meet Sunday morning to consider Stu- dent Government Council's refusal to permit Galens to hold a campus bucket drive Dec. 7-8. Dean of Men Walter B. Rea re- quested the meeting after talking yesterday to Bob Kretzschmar, '57, president of the Senior Medi- cal honorary. SGC's action came Wednesday night after an hour and a half discussion of Galens' request. Kretzschmar appeared before the Council to present Galens' case. Because they did not have the necessary time to contact fac- ulty and alumni on whether they should join with the unified Cam- pus Chest Drive next spring, he said, the Society felt it would be unwise to abandon their annual December campus drive. Pact; Would In East 'With View Aggression i " ..Ool Utmost Gravity' DROP BOOKS: Slippery Sidewalks Snare Students Fear Syria May Move Adams Will Raise Sigma Kappa Issue By PETER ECKSTEIN The rough outlines of next Wednesday's Student Government Council meeting on Sigma Kappa began to take shape yesterday, with the sorority's anticipated arguments yet to be made public. SGS President Bill Adams, '57BAd, predicted the issue, would be introduced by a state- ment of the question - "maybe a motion" - by him as chairman of the meeting. The exact wording of the ques- tion is "something we're all going to work on" at a committee-of- the-whole meeting on Sunday. Adams indicated the Council would be asked first for a "fact determination" on whether the local chapter of Sigma Kappa stands in violation of University regulations forbidding member- ship restriction on racial and re- ligious grounds by organizations recognized after 1949, when the regulations were adopted. The question has been raised a' as result of the suspension this summer of Sigma Kappa locals at Tufts and Cornell universities by the sorority's national council of five women. Both chapters had pledged Negro women during spring rushing. The local sorority has denied, through its president, Barbara Busch, 57Ed, that it so restricts r membership. Adams revealed yesterday that he has not heard from national Sigma Kappa since an acknow- ledgement earlier in themonth V of an SGC notification that the issue would be considered Wednes- day. While he as yet has re- ceived "no positive indication", he said "everything so far has led me to believe that thernational would be represented at the meet- ing," possibly by an attorney. He said it "might be nice" if the sorority made its position known before hte coming meet- ing, "although I don't know that it's necessary.", Miss Busch commented yester- day she did not know whether the national council would be repre- sented "in person," but she said its point of view would be repre- sented "at least in letter." Wheth- er the position would be made public before the meeting "is up to SGC." She added that "every nation- al has a lawyer" but that she did not know whether Sigma Kappa's would attend the meeting. Miss Busch expressed "hopes" that members of SGC would "use their heads and make a wise de- cision" on the sorority' status. 4years in favor of strictly amateur intercollegiate athletics" was made public by Prof. George McEwen of the Engineering School, and sec- retary of the Senate Advisory Committee. This meeting of the Faculty Senate was held before &i Confer- ence get-together on Dec. 5 in Chicago where legislation attempt- ing to illegalize unearned aid to athletes will be voted upon. Under Regent bylaws, the Senate can recommend policy to the Univer- sity's athletic Board. Faculty members indicated the main issue of debate was how fast to procede toward an amateur code. Prof. John Kohl of the en- gineer school and president of the Senate, observed, "The Senate was informed by Mr. Plant and Mr. Crisler that the University would work for reform within the Con- ference rather than pull out." Kohl remarked that haste by! the University could result in the loss of our leadership position among the Conference Schools. He thought the "equalization" plan, if it granted athletic scholarships on the basis of both need and aca- demic ability would be a step in the right direction. He emphasized the importance of enforcing the penalties of equalization, one of which he said was "disqualifying an athlete for- ever from college- athletics if he took money not authorized by the plan." McEwen reported there was "some dissent" to the Angell mo- tion. Prof. Eric Stockton of the English department, said he ap- proved of the Angel motion, but added "some didn't think it was strong enough; some thought it didn't effectively prevent bid- ding; some observed it was more or less an approval of the status quo."; silly. This is one of harmless places to kissing." the more do your Hungary Aid From U.S. AdlwI 1 h ILP e .R j L ] Traditional Drive He also emphasized the import- AUGUSTA, Ga. ()--President ance of possible financial loss and Dwight D. Eisenhower kept a I damage to public relations and Digtug D ah Eisenh wder public education. Galens has tra- continuing watch on the powder ditionally conducted a city and keg Middle East yesterday and' campus bucket drive in December also appointed a coordinator to to aid its work in the children's this country's Hungarian refugeesi p program. Because it felt the principle of The President picked Tracy S. a unified Campus Chest Drive in Vooreesforer uderecrearythe spring would be destroyed if Voorhees, former undersecretary Galensconducted a campus drive, of the Army, to serve as his per- the Council denied permission. The sonnel representative in {the hand-tCmuschenBed hae r e ling of that program-and to study Campus Chest Board had pre- whether more than 5,000 of the viously guaranteed Galens $7,000, refhuehesrmr Soiet terrorismapproximately the amount it col- shorefugees befro admitted to therrorism lects every year in its combined States. city-campus drive. I -Daily-John Hirtzel OOPS, SLIPPERY PAVEMENT-University coed slips on ice on Ann Arbor sidewalk yesterday. Coed was one of many who found local pavements slippery. Weather Bureau officials at Willow Run Airport forecast snow flurries for today, clearing tomorrow, and snow flurries again Sunday and Monday. Official forecast calls for temperatures three to six degrees below normal. Weatherman said temperatures through the 15th of December would be below the seasonal norm. Yes, they said, there will be more slippery pavements. And President Eisenhower ap- pealed, too, for generous public support of a newly launched American Red Cross drive for five million dollars in emergency funds for Hungarian relief. The President voiced his appealI in a statement announcing the Red Cross campaign for supple-# mental money. Earlier he received a. telegram from E. Roland Harriman, Red Cross chairman, saying the inter- national agency now is feeding about 150,000 persons daily in Hungary, and that more funds are needed for such relief there as well as for aid to refugees being admitted to the United States. 'Noting Lost' Because the C a m p u s C h e s t Board intended to ask Galens to man buckets and help with pub- licity in the spring, Council Treas- urer Lew Engman, '57, said, neith- er the educational nor public re- lations aspect of the drive would be lost. The Society will still con-; duct a city drive next week. j The Board in Review may be called by any of its members when there is a point at issue in SGC action. As defined in the SGC plan, points at issue arise when there is a question of Council jur- isdiction or further consideration is necessary in view of Regent policy or administrative practice. The points at issue in this case will not be decided until the Board meets at 10:30 a.m. Sunday in the Union. The point at issue in this casej will not be decided until the Board meets at 10:30 a.m. Sunday in the Union. Members of the Board are Dean Rea, Dean of Women Deborah Ba- con, Prof. Lionel H. Laing of the political science department, Prof. Leo A Schmidt of the business ad- ministration school, Dean Earl V.! Moore of the music school, SGC President Bill Adams, '57BAd and Joel Tauber, '59L. MUST LEAVE SUEZ: U.S. Drops Hints of Oil For Europe in Future WASHINGTON (AP)-The State Department broadly hinted yes- terday emergency oil supplies for Europe will begin flowing as soon as Britain and France make a "definite statement" about plans to pull their troops out of Egypt. Top officials said such a statement, setting a public timetable for troop withdrawals, would "have a bearing" on American readiness to put an emergency plan into operation, to help relieve the European shortage caused by the closing of the Suez Canal. They expressed this view in commenting on a decision by British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd to put off until Monday an expected formal announcement of Britain's Mayor. Sets 'Brigadoon' Week In Honor of MUSKET Showe By VERNON NAHRGANG Mayor William E. Brown, Jr., has proclaimed next week "Briga- doon" Week in Ann Arbor in honor of the new MUSKET show's first production. In a proclamation issued yesterday, the mayor noted, "the men and women of MUSKET have given unstintingly of their time and talent to produce a polished pleasurable show." "At first," MUSKET Publicity Chairman Tom Oates, '57E. ex-I plained, "we tried to get the town to change the names of some of the streets as a publicity gag. Wei readiness to join France . n a "phased withdrawal" of forces from Egypt.- Anticipating a satisfactory Brit- ish pledge, final- arrangements have been completed by govern- ment agencies to trigger the emer- gency oil arrangements which would move 500,000 to 1,100,000 barrels daily to Europe. A White House announcement officially setting the plan in mo- tion is ready, authorities said, to reassure European allies of the United States willingness to co- operate in solving the mounting! oil crisis. Officials involved in the oil arrangements said they expected they would be invoked early next week, presumably after Lloyd's Monday announcement. Move Final Location of a $10,000,000 med- ical-pharmaceutical iesearch cen- ter on North Campus was assured today when Parks, Davis & Co. formally announced in Detroit they will establish a division in Ann Arbor. Harry J. Loynd, Parke, Davis president, said the company's board of directors approved pur- chase of a 50-acre tract of land from the University at the junc- tion of Plymouth Road and the proposed US-23 east bypass. Miller Call's Campaigns, Ineffective By DALE McGHEE "The individual campaign events as thrown together into the whole presidential campaign,, don't have nearly as much influ- ence as many of us would like to believe," Prof. Warren E. Miller, of the political science depart- ment, said last night. Speaking before the second Graduate Roundtable meeting of the semester, Prof. Miller, in an- alysis, limited the effect of presi- dential campaigns to reactivating and reaffirming attitudes already held by voters. These attitudes, he stated, are formulated by the individual voter as the result of a variety of needs. Drawing evidence from data gathered as research associate of Survey Research Center, Prof. Miller said, "I would doubt very much that either the 1952 or 1956 campaigns had much effect to- ward change," "There was almost no net change as a result of campaign activity in either election," he furthered.% Contrary to possibly common opinion, Prof. Miller drew the con- clusion that, "important as the crisis in the Middle East may have seemed to be, it didn't change many votes." "It also only served to support already existant attitudes," he continued. "Republicans thought we needed a military man like Eisenhower to cope with the situ- ation. Democrats thought this was the result of too great an involve- ment in foreign affairs." He offered this example in sup- port of his contention that there is little relationship between the amount of publielty and pudlic attention which an event receives aind the final decision of the voter. Against Iraq Syria Tries to Stir Middle East Tension WASHINGTON (MP-The United States said yesterday it would view "with utmost gravity" any threat to the territorial integrity or political independence of Tur- key, Pakistan, Iraq and Iran. The State Department revealed the American attitude in a state- ment approved by President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Secre- tary of State John Foster Dulles. Top officials said the statement was a warning designed to demon- strate United States support for the four countries allied in the Baghdad Pact. "The United States reaffirms its support for the -collective efforts of these nations to maintain their Independence," the statement said. "A threat to the territorial in- tegrity or the political indepen- dence of these members would be viewed by the United States with the utmost gravity." Statement Timed The statement was timed, ofti- cials said, to make clear American concern for the welfare of these four countries at a time when the. Baghdad alliance is being assailed by other Arab leaders and Russia for allegedly playing an upsetting role in the Middle East. Meanwhile, in Baghdad, Iraq's Premier Nuri Said is reported standing firm against a mounting campaign aimed at stirring up trouble in Iraq and discrediting his government. Syrian Clique The controlling pro-Soviet army clique in Syria and the Egyptian government are believed sponsor- ing the campaign. Khalil Ibrahim, Iraqi informa- tion director, declared the pre- mier has not intention of quitting or making changes in his cabinet "for the time being." Iraq .has accused Syria of wag- ing a campaign of subversion against 'the Nuri government. Syria has charged Iraq with seek- ing to undermine the governments of both Syria and Jordan. Egyp- tian President Ganial Abdel Nasser is believed spurring the Syrians on. Interlochen To Enlarge Operations By CAROL PRINS Plans for a year-around program of instruction on the 700-acre site of the University of Illinois Na- tional Music Camp at Interlochen have been announced. The proposed National Arts Ac- ademy, which is scheduled to open in September, 1958, will offer a complete program in all academic subjects as well as the arts. The program will emphasize in- struction in music, .art, dance and speech for approximately 300 su- perior students at the junior and senior high school level. The academy will not interfere with the specialized summer pro- gram in music, art, drama and dance which has been a feature of the National Music Camp. Students will be chosen on rec- ommendations from schools on the basis of exceptional academic work, artistic interest and ability. Tuition, room and board rates are set for $200 a year, however Maddy explained this cost will de- crease as scholarship programs are developed. . I approached the mayor on that. "Then we tried to get permis- sion to hang banners over the streets," Oates continued, "but Mayor Brown wouldn't allow that. He must have finally thought he should do something for us, so he made next week 'Brigadoon' Week." Mayor Brown's "Brigadoon" Week proclamation reads in full: "WHEREAS the University of Michigan Union has created a new all-campus musical show known as MUSKET and COVER 444 PROJECTS: 'U' Engineers Study Radiation, Atomics, Jets By JAMES BOW The University's Engineering Research Institute is conducting projects this year on subjects varying from jet engines to atomic I radiation, The research. described in the Institute's recently-issued report, The local hasF not voted on what WHEREAS the men and women cos iiues of f ov projects $, 0,000u ea at. ": effec aevents do have," he c course it would follow if its na- of MUSKET have-given unstint- all-time high, according crigto the th tional were forced to leave cam- ingly of their time and talent to report, "are conditioned pus. Iproduce a polished pleasurable Non-Profit Basisnhtpol bigt h show and Started in 1920, the Engineering Pane "ebaWHEREAS their efforts will be Research Institute is the Univer- IHC To Sb 6 6 68 culminated by their sparkling sity's largest research unit, direct- oh presentation of *"Brigadoon at ing projects pertaining to industry, - t 9 ~~~the Michigan Theatre the nights On l ln egovernment. and other organiza-Io a S of December 5, 6 and 7, and tions. on a non-profit basis. w ds WdnHRES the rresidets of The repo r tae muc of e Football. F] "Is Violence the Path to Peace" (Ann Arbor will be treated to a r-esearch is concerned with the"WE AStersdns fTeeptsaesmcofheF will be discussed by four faculty most entertaining presentation onE Bilitary, one p oc ts .on- members at 8 p~m. today in Aud. those nights: dulita, si te ie ein eontr d on e a s onilw p A of Angell Rall. ducthd "TRnifr rgad oI terdoy Counl d tiaEti IntRe anel dr -. B n vn sr showng, heg iing bln of the d artment of of December 3-7 'Brigadoon' Week Anothe projec t se games next Thursdaye Boligo h e amntofii an retersdns~ nAayis Design. included some Vice-president Drake Du econmic, Pof.Morrs Jnowtz rboi toattnd Bniaon'. phases of Project. Michigan, the sadysedy of the department of sociology, ~ _________ ~ uxesti rga nbtl gi"- hw einn ___iestysporm nbtl I sid esedy Prof. Anatol Rapoport of the Men- - - miiay-.'~ sfe oaysue 'area surveillance for the miiayI h hw einn tal Health Institute and Prof. W. p~eaim.,ose" is free ito any s'ntueniit . Slosson of the department of his- 1 NInIUPhl 11Qi i . esr .n .. Mesr'os campaign oncluded, attitudes e events, LoW ihns ovill spon- from the football in South inistrative uane, '58, at 7:30 nt. Duane >n of the i